Robot manipulator having a robot wrist with an offset

ABSTRACT

A robot manipulator which includes an upper arm having a wrist coupled to one end of the upper arm. The wrist includes at least three rotational axes of articulation with one of the rotational axes offset from an intersection of the other two rotational axes. Three twist angles are formed between the respective rotational axes. The value of these twist angles is optimized to orientate the three rotational axes of articulation in a configuration minimizing the space which the robot manipulator cannot reach.

This is a divisional of copending application Ser. No. 07/987,167 filed on Dec. 7, 1992.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to a method of determining the twist angle between the rotational axes of each articulation with regard to three articulations constituting the robot wrist, and more particularly to a method of determining kinematic parameters for the robot wrist, in which a method of determining the twist angle between the rotational axes is developed so that the robot wrist can orient arbitrarily at any positions without regard to the location of the robot arm when attaching the robot wrist in which the rotational axes of three articulations do not coincide at one point, to the robot arm of an articulated type.

2. Description of the Prior Art

In general, a robot necessitates six articulations in order for the end-effector of the robot to select a certain position and posture in the three-dimensional workspace. The aforementioned six articulations are composed of three articulations for selecting a position and of three articulations for selecting a posture. Of these, the part having three articulations for selecting a posture is referred to as the wrist. The wrist has to be constructed so that it can orient arbitrarily at that position without regard to the construction of the robot arm, when the aforementioned robot arm equipped with 3 degrees of freedom for determining a posture selected a certain position. Of the robot wrist manufactured up to now, there are two wrists; one is that the rotational axes of each articulation coincide at one point and the other is that the rotational axes of each articulation do not coincide at one point. As for the wrist having the rotational axes of the three articulations which coincide at one point, the fact that the scope in which the robot wrist can be oriented is restricted in accordance with the magnitude of the twist angle between the rotational axes, was publicly disclosed (R. P. Paul, "Kinematics of Robot Wrist, J. of Robotics Research, 1983). In order to eliminate such restriction, a method of determining twist angle between the rotational axes has been proposed. As for the wrist having rotational axes of the three articulations which do not coincide at one point, i.e. having an offset the fact that the scope in which the wrist cannot be oriented exists in accordance with the construction of said three articulations, was disclosed (U.S. Pat. No. 4,823,279, Unimation, Inc., Inventor: William Perzley, etc.). However, a method of determining the twist angle between the rotational axes of three articulations having said rotational axes which do not coincide at one point, has not been disclosed yet. It depends only upon the method of determining the twist angle for robot wrist in which said rotational axes coincide at one point. In consequence, if attaching the wrist having the construction of an offset which kinematic parameters were determined in accordance with the existing method of determining kinematic parameters, to the robot arm of an articulated type, the wrist cannot orient arbitrarily while it was originally intended to do.

The method of determining the twist angle between the rotational axes of three articulations constituting the conventional robot wrist will be explained in more detail as the following.

First, the construction of three articulations constituting the robot wrist is modeled mathematically as shown in FIG. 1 a). In the drawing, as for each articulation, its own coordinate system is established and correlation of front articulation and rear articulation is represented as four each of kinematic parameters. The coordination system established in each articulation is the right-angled system having the constituents of X, Y and Z but FIG. 1 a) shows only the axes of X and Z. Axis (Z₃) is the rotational axis of the first articulation among three articulations constituting the wrist and represents the direction of the robot arm. Axis (Z₄) and axis (Z₅) are rotational axes of the remaining articulations and axis (Z₅) expressly represents the wrist direction. Axis (X₃) means X axis of a coordinate system established in the first articulation and under the initial state which each of the rotational axis was not rotated, axis (X₄) and axis (X₅) of the remaining articulations come to coincide to the X axis of the aforesaid first articulation. Of four kinematic parameters, the most important parameter of determining orienting region of the wrist is the twist angle between Z axes and is denoted by α in the drawing. Twist angle (α₄) is shown between axis (Z₃) and axis (Z₄), and twist angle (α₅) is shown between axes (Z₄) and (Z₅).

It is known up to now that when twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) have the different value from each other, an axis (Z₅) cannot exist in a conical space region (cone) (P) formed around axis (Z₃) if axis (Z₅) rotates about axis (Z₄) as shown in FIG. 1 b) (R. P. Paul, "Kinematics of Robot Wrist", J. of Robotics Research, 1983). This means that when axis (Z₃) is the direction of the robot arm and axis (Z₅) is the wrist direction, there exists a certain space between axis (Z₃) and axis (Z₅) and thus the robot wrist cannot orient in this region. However, if twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) have the equal value from each other, the direction of the robot arm may coincide to the wrist direction and thus the wrist can orient arbitrarily in the region indicated with a slant line. Also, the region (R) which is not represented as a slant line in FIG. 1 c) completely disappears if twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) become 90° respectively.

As the result, the technique of determining kinematic parameters for the robot wrist used up to date requires that twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) should have equal value and that each of the angle size becomes 90° respectively. As for most conventional robot wrist, such method of determining the parameters was used.

Meanwhile, the aforesaid method of determining kinematic parameters applies to the wrist with an offset having the construction in which the rotational axes do not coincide at one point. Especially if attaching the wrist having such construction, to the robot arm of an articulated type, original object thereof cannot be achieved.

Namely, as for such kind of robot, there exist some region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented arbitrarily. Actually in the industrial fields, such kind of robot is used mostly but all of them have the drawbacks mentioned above.

The problems of the robot being used at present will be explained in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. FIG. 2 shows a mathematically modeled robot with wrist in which the rotational axes of three articulations do not coincide at one point, which was attached to the arm of an articulated type.

Kinematic parameters of said robot are shown in the following Table 1.

                  TABLE 1                                                          ______________________________________                                         Articulation  α                                                                               a          d   θ                                    ______________________________________                                         1             90     0          0   θ.sub.1                              2             0      l.sub.2    0   θ.sub.2                               3'           0      l.sub.3    0   θ.sub.3                              3             -90    0          0   -90                                        4             90     0          0   θ.sub.4                              5             -90    0          d.sub.5                                                                            θ.sub.5                              6             0      0          0   θ.sub.6                              ______________________________________                                    

In the above Table 1, twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) of articulation (4) and articulation (5) are 90° respectively. These values are those determined according to the conventional method of determining kinematic parameters. The denotation (-) represents the case where the initial coordinate position is the opposite direction. With regard to a distance (d) between the rotational axes, it can be seen from the above Table that there exist a distance (d₅) between articulation (4) and articulation (5). The value of this distance (d₅) becomes 0 if the rotational axes of three articulations coincide at one point.

If the distance (d₅) is 0, no problem arises in the conventional method of determining kinematic parameters. If it is not 0 as mentioned above, problems arise as the following.

As shown in FIG. 3, supposing that the robot should assume a posture of a at point (P₅) in workspace, the robot should determine the posture of a positioning at point (P₅) and by moving articulation (4) and articulation (5). However, axis (Z₅) representing the wrist direction moves only outside the conical region (P^(o)) and cannot reach inside the conical region (P^(o)) as shown in FIG. 4, even if said robot causes articulation (4) and articulation (5) to rotate. That is, the robot wrist cannot assume the posture of a in case there exist a virtual posture a within the aforesaid conical region (P^(o)).

In conclusion, in case of the robot wrist having the rotational axes of three articulations which do not coincide at one point, there exist some region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented at a virtual position in workspace even though twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) are equal and 90° according to the conventional method of determining kinematic parameters thereof. As the result, kinematic parameters, i.e. twist angles (α₄) and (α₅) should not be equal or 90° when attaching the wrist with an offset, to the robot arm of an articulated type.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Therefore, reasons for such problems were analyzed and presented as well as an improved method of determining new kinematic parameters was developed in the present invention. First, reasons for such problems are described below.

In case of the aforesaid robot, twist angle (α₄) of axis (Z₄) to axis (Z₃) was determined 90° at the time of determining kinematic parameters. When an offset in wrist was involved in determining a position, axis (Z₃) representing the arm direction can be defined as new direction, axis (Z₃ ^(o)) as shown in FIG. 4. In case twist angle between axis (Z₃ ^(o)) and axis (Z₄) be α₄ ^(o), the value is not 90° (please refer to FIG. 5).

Axis (Z₃ ^(o)) herein is the direction connecting the third articulation to the end point of an offset link of wrist and the connection link between these two points is defined as a virtual robot upper arm. That is, the aforesaid conventional robot comprises the articulation of which the upper part length is l₃ ^(o) (=√l₃ ² +d₅ ² ), and has the similar kinematic characteristics to the robot with wrist having no offset in which twist angle (α₄ ^(o)) and twist angle (α₅) between the articulations constituting wrist are different from each other. Consequently, there always exist the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented.

Also, in case of the robot having the aforesaid construction, the size and the shape of the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented are not equal at the workpoint in all workspace. The computer simulation reflects this well and the results thereof are as follows. The values of kinematic parameters in the robot used in the computer simulation became; l₂ =800 mm, l₃ =800 mm, d₅ =100 mm in the above Table 1. Supposing one cross section in workspace in the simulation, it was investigated how the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented varies when the robot arm moved toward vertical or horizontal direction of the cross section.

This section is a plane which workspace of the robot was cut toward the direction X₀, Z₀, in FIG. 2, and when rotating this around axis Z₀, total workspace appears. The characteristics from the aforesaid plane are the same ones from the plane obtained by rotating this plane around the Z₀ axis. In order to see how the space in which the robot cannot be oriented at each point in the plane varies, several representing points were selected as shown in FIG. 6 and the conical space in which the robot cannot be oriented at each point was drawn with size and shape of the base. As the result, shape variation of the space could be seen as shown in FIG. 7 and by finding vertical angle and horizontal angle on the basis of the angular point of the conical space, there is shown the size of the space in Table 2. FIG. 7 shows that the conical space shrinks horizontally as the robot stretches its arm on the basis of center of workplane and expand horizontally as the robot shirinks. Consequently, it can be seen that the size and the shape of the conical space which the robot cannot be oriented varies according to the location of the robot.

                  TABLE 2                                                          ______________________________________                                         Position   Horizontal angle                                                                            Vertical angle                                         ______________________________________                                         1          28.4210      14.2500                                                2          22.9454      14.2500                                                3          19.1673      14.2500                                                4          16.4252      14.2500                                                5          14.2500      14.2500                                                6          12.7582      14.2500                                                7          11.4686      14.2500                                                8          10.3793      14.2500                                                9          9.3550       14.2500                                                10         13.1837      14.2500                                                11         13.7927      14.2500                                                12         14.1376      14.2500                                                13         13.7977      14.2500                                                14         13.2550      14.2500                                                ______________________________________                                    

As shown in Table 2, in case of the wrist with an offset, some region in which the robot cannot be arbitrarily oriented appeared even when twist angles (α₄) and (α₅) are equal and the magnitude thereof is 90°. That is because that the wrist offset affected determination of the position and thus the new arm direction (Z₃ ^(o)) was defined, and the twist angle (α₄ ^(o)) between axis (Z₄) and axis (Z₃ ^(o)) is not 90°.

Accordingly, it can be seen that when determining kinematic parameters of the robot wrist with an offset, one of kinematic parameters, i.e., the twist angles (α₄) and (α₅) must not be equal and the magnitude thereof not be 90°.

As the result of analyzing the reasons for problems, the present invention was conceived to eliminate such problems. An object of the present invention is to provide for a method of determining kinematic parameters of the robot wrist with an offset with regard to a method of determining twist angle between the rotational axes so that the robot can be oriented arbitrarily at any positions without regard to position of the robot arm when attaching the robot wrist in which the rotational axes of three articulations do not coincide at one point, to the robot arm.

To achieve such object, the present invention provides for a method of determining kinematic parameters for the robot wrist with an offset in which the rotational axes of articulation constituting the wrist do not coincide at one point, wherein when the aforesaid twist angle (α₄) is determined first within the range of (0≦|α₄ |≦180°) with regard to the twist angles (α₄) and (α₅) between the rotational axes of three articulations constituting the wrist, the magnitude of the aforesaid twist angle (α₅) is;

    (l.sub.3.sup.o).sup.2 =(l.sub.3).sup.2 +(d.sub.5).sup.2 -2 * l.sub.3 * d.sub.5 * cos (180°-α.sub.4)                 (1) ##EQU1## determined to be equal to the twist angle (α.sub.4.sup.o) determined by the formulas (1) and (2) mentioned above, the signs thereof accord to the established direction of the initial coordinate system, l.sub.3 therein is a length of robot upper arm, d.sub.5 is a length of an offset in wrist and results of the formula (2) are 0≦α.sub.4.sup.o ≦180°.

Also, the present invention provides for a method of determining kinematic parameters of the robot wrist having an offset in which the rotational axes of the articulation constituting the wrist do not coincide at one point, wherein the method of determining kinematic parameters of the robot wrist is characterized in that when the aforesaid twist angle (α₅) is determined first within the range of (0≦|α₅ |≦180°) with regard to the twist angles (α₄) and (α₅) between the rotational axes of three articulations constituting the wrist, the magnitude of twist angle (α₄) is determined to be equal to twist angle (α₄ ^(oo)) obtained by the following formulas (3) and (4);

    (l.sub.3).sup.2 =(l.sub.3.sup.o).sup.2 +(d.sub.5).sup.2 -2*l.sub.3.sup.o *d.sub.5 * cos (α.sub.5)                            (3) ##EQU2## the signs thereof accord to the established direction of the initial coordinate system, l.sub.3.sup.o therein is a virtual link length between end point (P.sub.3) of articulation upper part and end point (P.sub.5) of an offset, and the results of the formula (4) are 0≦α.sub.4.sup.oo ≦180°.

And accordong to the present invention, the robot can orient at any positions without regard to position of the robot arm if attaching the robot wrist in which the rotational axes of three articulations do not coincide at one point, to the robot arm of an articulated type. There exist some space in which the robot cannot be oriented, but the space becomes smaller than that formed according to the conventional method of determining kinematic parameters if some value is assigned for one of the twist angles (α₄) and (α₅), and the other is determined to become more appropriate to the value calculated by the formulas (1) and (2), or the formulas (3) and (4).

Further, a method of determining kinematic parameters of the robot wrist according to the present invention is characterized in that with regard to the twist angle (α₄) determined above, magnitude of the aforesaid twist angle (α₅) is determined within the range of (2 * α₄ ^(o) -|α₄ |)<α₅ <|α₄ | or (180°-|α₄ |)<α₅ <(180°-2 * α₄ ^(o) +|α₄ |), and the signs thereof are determined at the time of establishing the initial coordinate system.

Also, a method of determining kinematic parameters of the robot wrist according to the present inventin is characterized in that with regard to the twist angle (α₅) determined above, magnitude of the aforesaid twist angle (α₄) is determined within the range of |α₅ |<α₄ <α₄ ^(oo) or (180°-α₄ ^(oo))<α₄ <(180°-|α₅ |), and the signs thereof are determined at the time of establishing the initial coordinate system.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more clearly understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIGS. 1 a), b) and c) illustrate orienting region of the wrist having no offset and more particularly,

FIG. 1 a) is an initial coordinate system of wrist.

FIG. 1 b) is a graph representing orienting region when α₄ ≠α₅, and

FIG. 1 c) is a graph representing orienting region when α₄ =α₅.

FIG. 2 is a schematic drawing representing robot model with wrist having an offset.

FIG. 3 is a graph representing an example of wrist direction which robot cannot orient.

FIG. 4 is a drawing illustrating a space in which wrist cannot orient.

FIG. 5 is a drawings illustrating twist angle (α₄ ^(o)) of Z₄ to newly defined arm direction (Z₃ ^(o)).

FIG. 6 is a graph representing workpoint for the computer simulation.

FIG. 7 is a drawing illustrating variation of the space in which wrist cannot orient.

FIG. 8 is a drawing illustrating relations of parameters for determining kinematic parameters α₄ and α₅ according to the new method of determining kinematic parameters thereof.

FIGS. 9 a), b), c) and d) are drawings illustrating variation of orienting region of wrist having an offset when α₄ is 90° and when adjusting kinematic parameter α₅.

FIGS. 10 a) and b) are drawings illustrating the reason why the conical space in which the base forms an ellipse type disappeared from FIGS. 9 b), c) and d).

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the drawings.

In FIG. 8 according to the present invention, the vector connecting point (P₃) and point (P₅) is defined as axis (Z₃ ^(o)) supposing that point (P₃) and point (P₄) be the both end points of upper articulation link of the robot arm and that point (P₅) be the end point of link offset in wrist. The length from point (P₃) to point (P₅) is defined as a virtual length of the robot upper arm (l₃ ^(o)). When twist angle (α₄) between axis (Z₃) and axis (Z₄) was determined a virtual angle in the robot wrist, the twist angle (α₅) between axis (Z₄) and axis (Z₅) is determined to be equal to the twist angle (α₄ ^(o)) between axis (Z₃ ^(o)) and axis (Z₄) or to be α₅ 180°-α₄ ^(o). The signs herein accord to the determined direction of the initial coordinate system.

In FIG. 8, l₃ is the robot arm length of upper articulation part and d₅ is the length of an offset.

A virtual robot arm length (l₃ ^(o)) therein is as the following.

    (l.sub.3.sup.o).sup.2 =(l.sub.3).sup.2 +(d.sub.5).sup.2 -2 * l.sub.3 * d.sub.5 * cos (180°-α.sub.4)                 (1)

Also, the aforesaid twist angle (α₄ ^(o)) is found as the following. ##EQU3##

As for twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅), twist angle (α₅) can be determined after twist angle (α₄) is determined as a virtual value, and alternatively twist angle (α₄) can be determined after twist angle (α₅) is determined. If twist angle (α₅) is determined after twist angle (α₄) is determined, twist angle (α₅) can be determined by formulas (1) and (2) above, and if twist angle (α₄) is determined after twist angle (α₅) is determined, the procedures are carried out as follows.

If twist angle (α₅) was determined first a virtual value, point (P₃), the end point of upper articulation link of robot arm is fixed on the extension line of Z₅ vector as shown in FIG. 8.

Then, a virtual link length (l₃ ^(o)) connecting point (P₃) to point (P₅) is found as the following.

    (l.sub.3).sup.2 =(l.sub.3.sup.o).sup.2 +(d.sub.5).sup.2 -2 * l.sub.3.sup.o * d.sub.5 * cos (α.sub.5)                           (3)

If a link (l₃ ^(o)) is found, twist angle (α₄ ^(oo)) is found by the following formula (4); ##EQU4## and the magnitude of twist angle (α₄) is determined to be equal to the twist angle (α₄ ^(oo)) and the signs thereof are determined at the time of establishing the initial coordinate system. Alternatively, the magnitude of the aforesaid twist angle (α₄) will become 180°-α₄ ^(oo) according to the direction of the initial coordinate system, the signs thereof are determined at the time of establishing the coordinate system.

By virtue of twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) determined according to the aforesaid method of determining kinematic parameters, the robot can orient arbitrarily at any positions.

As for the aforesaid results obtained by the method of determining kinematic parameters, the computer simulation was conducted. As an example, twist angle (α₄) was determined 90° in the simulation and twist angle (α₅) was calculated by the aforesaid formula (2) to be 82.875°. The final value of α₅ according to the direction of determining the initial coordinate system becomes -82.875°.

In case where the conventional method of determining kinematic parameters applied to the robot wrist having an offset, there existed some region in which the robot cannot be oriented arbitrarily. However, in case where twist angle (α₄) become 90° and twist angle (α₅) become -82.875° according to the present invention, the region in which the robot cannot be oriented completely disappears as shown in FIG. 9. FIG. 9 a) indicates the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented when the offset end point (P₅) is at the same height as point (P₃) (at position 5 of FIG. 6) at the posture which the robot shown in FIG. 2 erects lower arm vertically. The outmost circle (m1) of the circles indicated with a dot represents the region (a base of the conical space) in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented in case where kinematic parameters were determined (α₄ =90°, α₅ =-90°) according to the conventional method. And the innermost part indicated with a dot represents the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented when twist angle (α₄) was determined to be 90° and twist angle (α₅) to be -82.875°. The intermediate circles (m2, m3, m4, m5) represent the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented when twist angle (α₄) is 90° and twist angle (α₅) is determined within the range from -90° according to the conventional method of determining kinematic parameters to -82.875° according to the present invention by gradually dividing into several phases.

It can be seen from the foregoing that the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented becomes smaller gradually as twist angle (α₅) is gradually reduced from -90° to -82.875°. And it can be seen that the region in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented completely disappeared in case where twist angle (α₅) was determined to be -82.875° finally.

In view of the aforesaid results, another new method of determining kinematic parameters can be defined. That is, after twist angle (α₄) is determined as a virtual value, if the magnitude of the aforesaid twist angle (α₅) is determined within the range obtained by the following formula (5) with regard to (α₄ ^(o)) determined by the formulas (1) and (2),

    α.sub.4.sup.o -(|α.sub.4 |-α.sub.4.sup.o)<α.sub.5 <|α.sub.4 |                                                (5)

the size of the space in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented becomes quite smaller than the size of the space formed by the existing method of determining parameters (twist angles (α₄) and (α₅) are equal).

The aforesaid formula (5) is expressed finally as the following formula (6).

    (2 * α.sub.4.sup.o -|α.sub.4 |)<α.sub.5 <|α.sub.4 |                       (6)

Also, in Z₅ vector of FIG. 8, if the coordinate system is determined at 180° opposite direction initially, the range of the aforesaid formula (6) is expressed as the range of the following formula (7);

    (180°-|α.sub.4 |)<α.sub.5 <(180°-2 * α.sub.4.sup.o +|α.sub.4 |)(7)

And when the aforesaid twist angle (α₅) is determined as a virtual value, magnitude of the twist angle (α₄) is determined |α₅ |<α₄ <α₄ ^(oo) or (180°-α₄ ^(oo))<α₄ <(180°-|α₅ |), and the signs thereof are determined at the time of establishing the initial coordinate system.

FIGS. 9 b), c) and d) show how the region in which the robot wrist having an offset cannot be oriented at positions 1, 10 and 9 of FIG. 6 varies in case where it was determined according to the conventional method of determining kinematic parameters and where determined according to the present invention.

One of the important facts can be found out from the results of the aforesaid simulation. That is, as for the conical space in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented, the size and the shape thereof vary according to the position of the robot in workspace. However, said space becomes one dot(s) and disappears when the base of the space becomes a complete circle as shown in FIG. 9 a) if twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) are determined in such a manner as described in the formulas (1) and (2). And when the base of the aforesaid space is an ellipse as shown in FIGS. 9 b), c) and d), the space becomes a line (k) and disappears. This line means that the wrist direction (Z₅) moves along the line if rotating θ₄ in 0°-360° after determining the position of the robot. The reasons are as the following.

It is supposed in FIG. 10 that Z₃ ^(o) be the newly defined arm direction and Z₅ ¹, Z₅ ², Z₅ ³ . . . , X₄ ¹, X₄ ², X₄ ³ . . . be Z₅ and X₄ when α₄ =90°, α₅ =90°.

If rotating θ₄ in 0°-360° after the position of the robot is determined at a point, Z₅ becomes Z₅ ¹, Z₅ ², Z₅ ³ . . . and X₄ becomes X₄ ¹, X₄ ², X₄ ³ . . . . The link offset in the wrist herein affects X₄ and the track of X₄ moves onto a curved surface rather than onto a plane. As α₅ is the value of determining the volumes for rotating Z₅ around X₄ vector, the existing Z₅ ¹, Z₅ ², Z₅ ³ . . . center on one dot or line when changing α₅ from the existing -90° to -82.875° in accordance with the method proposed in the present invention. FIG. 10 a) shows the shape that when the base of the conical space in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented is a complete circle, Z₅ vector centers on one dot and the space disappears. FIG. 10 b) shows the shape that when the base of the conical space is an ellipse, Z₅ vector centers on one line and this space disappears.

Consequently, according to the present invention mentioned above, the robot wrist can orient arbitrarily at any position mentioned above, the robot wrist can orient arbitrarily at any positions only when kinematic parameters, i.e. twist angles (α₄) and (α₅) are determined by the formulas (1) and (2) or by the formulars (3) and (4). Also, the space in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented shrinks gradually as twist angle (α₄) is 90° and twist angle (α₅) is gradually reduced from the existing -90° to -82.875° obtained by the formulas (1) and (2). That is, after one of twist angle (α₄) and twist angle (α₅) is determined as a virtual value, if the other is determined to be more approximate to the value obtained by the formulas (1) and (2) or the formulas (3) and (4), the space in the space in which the robot wrist cannot be oriented becomes smaller as compared with the existing method of determining kinematic parameters.

As the result, the present invention obtains the effects that the robot wrist can be oriented at any positions without regard to the position of the robot arm when attaching the robot wrist in which the rotational axes of three articulations do not coincide at one point, to the robot arm of an articulated type. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A robot manipulator comprising:an upper arm having a first end and a second end; a wrist coupled to said second end of said upper arm, said wrist including at least three rotational axes of articulation with one of said rotational axes offset from an intersection of another two of said rotational axes by a wrist offset; a first twist angle formed between a first of said at least three rotational axes and a second of said at least three rotational axes; a second twist angle formed between a third of said at least three rotational axes and said second rotational axis; a third twist angle formed between said second rotational axis and a line extending between said first end of said upper arm and an end of said wrist offset which is spaced from said second end of said upper arm; a distance between said first end of said upper arm and said wrist offset end which is spaced from said second end along said line is related to said first twist angle by the following (l₃ ^(o))² =(l₃)² +(d₅)² -2 * l₃ * d₅ * cos (180°-α₄)wherein l₃ ^(o) is said distance, l₃ is the length of said upper arm, d₅ is the length of said wrist offset and α₄ is said first twist angle;said third twist angle relates to said distance by the following ##EQU5## wherein l₄ ^(o) is said third angle; and said second angle is within the range of

    (2 * α.sub.4.sup.o -|α.sub.4 |)≦α.sub.5 ≦|α.sub.4 |

wherein α₅ is said second twist angle.
 2. The robot manipulator of claim 1 wherein said second twist angle is substantially equal to said third twist angle.
 3. The robot manipulator of claim 2, wherein said twist angles are provided such that said robot wrist can orient arbitrarily at any position without regard to a position of said robot arm.
 4. The robot manipulator of claim 3, wherein one of said twist angles has an absolute value of about 82.875°.
 5. The robot manipulator of claim 2, wherein one of said twist angles has an absolute value of about 82.875°.
 6. The robot manipulator of claim 1, wherein said twist angles are provided such that said robot wrist can orient arbitrarily at any position without regard to a position of said robot arm.
 7. The robot manipulator of claim 6, wherein one of said twist angles has an absolute value of about 82.875°.
 8. The robot manipulator of claim 1, wherein one of said twist angles has an absolute value of about 82.875°. 